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B/E Aerospace Announces Cost Reduction Plans, Comments On Earnings Outlook.


Business Editors & Travel Writers

WELLINGTON, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 23, 2001

B/E Aerospace, Inc. (Nasdaq:BEAV BEAV Binary Editor and Viewer ) today announced a comprehensive action plan to re-align its capacity and cost structure, consistent with changed conditions in the airline industry. Management also commented on the outlook for the company's financial performance.

"The U.S. airline industry is experiencing severe financial stress in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks," said Mr. Robert J. Khoury, President and Chief Executive Officer of B/E Aerospace. "As expected, our airline customers have implemented stringent cash conservation measures. This has significantly reduced demand for our aircraft cabin An aircraft cabin is the section of an aircraft in which passengers travel, often just called the cabin. At cruising altitudes, the surrounding atmosphere is too thin to breathe without an oxygen mask, so cabin pressurization adapts the cabin to atmospheric pressures.  interior products, necessitating the actions we announce today."

SUMMARY
-- B/E to close five facilities, reduce workforce by approximately 1,000
employees

-- Management team's compensation to be reduced by 35 to 50 percent

-- Company plans to record cash charges of approximately $15 million to reflect
cash costs associated with actions announced today

-- B/E will also take non-cash charges totaling approximately $55 million
associated with write-down of fixed assets affected by the restructuring, and
$20 million associated with impairment of related intangible assets

-- Management expects revenues of approximately $650 million and earnings of
approximately $0.85 per share for the next fiscal year ending February 2003,
and approximately break-even financial results for second half of current
fiscal year ending February 2002, both excluding costs and charges related to
the above actions


FACILITIES AND WORKFORCE

B/E currently employs about 4,650 people and operates 16 principal production facilities. After the planned reductions in facilities and workforce, the company will have approximately 3,650 employees and 11 principal production facilities worldwide.

"The actions we announce today are painful, affecting employees and their families," said Mr. Khoury. "Regrettably, these actions are necessary to ensure B/E's viability in the adverse conditions which now dominate our industry.

"Our airline customers are facing an unprecedented situation. Air travel is down dramatically in the wake of the September 11 attacks September 11 attacks

Series of airline hijackings and suicide bombings against U.S. targets perpetrated by 19 militants associated with the Islamic extremist group al-Qaeda.
. In response, U.S. airlines have reduced scheduled flights, taken about 20 percent of their aircraft out of service and announced workforce reductions which will likely involve more than 100,000 workers.

"Our customers' need to conserve cash has substantially reduced aftermarket Aftermarket

See: Secondary market.


aftermarket

See secondary market.
 demand for B/E's products. We expect airline spending on cabin interior retrofits and refurbishments to be adversely affected for the foreseeable future. In addition, current forecasts indicate that deliveries of new aircraft will be down significantly for at least the next several years. Given the reduction in both aftermarket and new aircraft demand, we have no choice but to downsize Downsize

Reducing the size of a company by eliminating workers and/or divisions within the company.

Notes:
When a company downsizes, it is attempting to find ways to improve efficiency and increase profitability.

It is sometimes referred to as trimming the fat.
 our operations."

To further reduce costs, B/E's senior executive management personnel have agreed to accept reductions in compensation ranging from 35 percent to 50 percent for this year, and if necessary for the following two years as well.

RESTRUCTURING CHARGES restructuring charge

The expense of reorganizing a company's operations. A restructuring charge is an infrequent expense that generally results from asset writedowns or facility closings.
 

B/E will record a cash charge of approximately $15 million to reflect the costs of facility closures, workforce reductions and other items related to its cost reduction program. In addition, the company plans to record non-cash charges Non-Cash Charge

A charge off, made by a company against earnings, that does not require an initial outlay of cash.

Notes:
Non-cash charges are typically against the depreciation, amortization, and depletion accounts on a company's balance sheet.
 of about $55 million for write-downs of property, equipment and inventories which have been impaired as a result of industry conditions and plant closures, and an additional non-cash charge of approximately $20 million to write down certain intangible assets Intangible Asset

An asset that is not physical in nature.

Notes:
Examples are things like copyrights, patents, intellectual property, and goodwill. These are the opposite of tangible assets.
.

EARNINGS OUTLOOK: SECOND HALF OF FISCAL 2002

During the first half of fiscal 2002, B/E reported sales of $356 million and continued its track record of sequentially expanding profit margins. Net earnings were $16.7 million for the first half of the year, excluding an extraordinary item for early extinguishment The destruction or cancellation of a right, a power, a contract, or an estate.

Extinguishment is sometimes confused with merger, though there is a clear distinction between them.
 of debt.

Before the September 11 attacks, the company was on track to generate sales of about $450 million and earnings of about $0.90 per share for the second half of the current fiscal year. For the second half of the current fiscal year ending February 2002, B/E now expects:

-- Sales of approximately $340 million, and

-- Approximately break-even net earnings excluding the planned

charges.

These expected results, which are down substantially from prior expectations, reflect the adverse impact of current industry conditions.

EARNINGS OUTLOOK: FISCAL 2003

For the fiscal year ending February 2003, B/E expects continuing operations continuing operations

Parts of a business that are expected to be maintained as an ongoing segment of an overall business operation. Income and losses from continuing operations are reported separately if any segments have been discontinued during the
 to generate:

-- Revenues of approximately $650 million,

-- Net earnings of approximately $0.85 per share, and

-- EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) A metric used to show a company's profitability, but not its cash flow. EBITDA became popular in the 1980s to show the potential profitability of leveraged buyouts, but has become  of about $135 million.

"Several key factors will help us to manage our way through the difficult operating environment In computing, an operating environment is the environment in which users run programs, whether in a command line interface, such as in MS-DOS or the Unix shell, or in a graphical user interface, such as in the Macintosh operating system.  that lies ahead," Mr. Khoury said. "Over 60 percent of our costs are variable, providing substantial financial flexibility. Our publicly traded debt requires no principal payments until 2008. Our new cockpit security product and cabin reconfiguration work may mitigate some of the reduced demand for our other offerings. Prospects for our Business Jet Group remain positive. Most importantly Adv. 1. most importantly - above and beyond all other consideration; "above all, you must be independent"
above all, most especially
, our senior management team has successfully navigated through difficult times in the past, having honed its skills in the adverse industry conditions of the early 1990s.

"We believe that B/E Aerospace will remain profitable and cash flow-positive, next year and thereafter, through the current industry downturn. We are also confident that there will eventually be a resurgence in the long-term growth drivers of our business. In fact, with the efficiencies created by the actions announced today and results already achieved with lean manufacturing Lean manufacturing is the production of goods using less of everything compared to mass production: less human effort, less manufacturing space, less investment in tools, and less engineering time to develop a new product.  and continuous improvement initiatives, our earnings power will be greatly enhanced when demand for our products returns to normal levels," Mr. Khoury concluded.

This news release contains forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA) implemented several significant substantive changes affecting certain cases brought under the federal securities laws, including changes related to pleading, discovery, liability, class representation and awards fees and  of 1995. Such forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and B/E's actual experience may differ materially from that anticipated in such statements. Factors that might cause such a difference include those discussed in B/E's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including but not limited to its most recent proxy statement Proxy Statement

A document containing the information that a company is required by the SEC to provide to shareholders so they can make informed decisions about matters that will be brought up at an annual stockholder meeting.
, Form 10-K Form 10-K

A report required by the SEC from exchange-listed companies that provides for annual disclosure of certain financial information.


Form 10-K

See 10-K.
 and Form 10-Q Form 10-Q

See 10-Q.
. For more information, see the section entitled "Forward-Looking Statements" contained in B/E's Form 10-K and in other filings.

B/E Aerospace, Inc. is the world's leading manufacturer of aircraft cabin interior products, serving virtually all the world's airlines and aircraft manufacturers. B/E designs, develops, manufactures, sells and services a broad line of passenger cabin interior products for both commercial and business/VIP aircraft and provides interior design, reconfiguration and conversion services to its customers throughout the world. For more information, visit B/E's web site at http:\\www.beaerospace.com.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 23, 2001
Words:1065
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